Advertisement

Panthers have NFL’s 2nd-most salary cap space following mandatory minicamp

On Thursday, Joe Person of The Athletic hinted that the Carolina Panthers could be in the market for a new pass rusher. But do they have the appropriate funds to even add one?

Well, as the case has been pretty much all offseason, they do.

So as we exit the mandatory minicamp portion of our offseason, let’s take an updated look at every team’s remaining salary cap space:

  1. Chicago Bears: $31.95 million

  2. Carolina Panthers: $26.42 million

  3. Arizona Cardinals: $26.03 million

  4. Detroit Lions: $23.43 million

  5. Indianapolis Colts: $22.91 million

  6. New York Jets: $22.15 million

  7. Dallas Cowboys: $20.01 million

  8. Houston Texans: $16.67 million

  9. Green Bay Packers: $16.22 million

  10. Cleveland Browns: $15.92 million

  11. Minnesota Vikings: $15.66 million

  12. Pittsburgh Steelers: $15.29 million

  13. Philadelphia Eagles: $14.50 million

  14. Cincinnati Bengals: $14.42 million

  15. New England Patriots: $14.02 million

  16. New Orleans Saints: $13.59 million

  17. Miami Dolphins: $13.32 million

  18. Los Angeles Chargers: $12.28 million

  19. Jacksonville Jaguars: $11.29 million

  20. Baltimore Ravens: $11.15 million

  21. Washington Commanders: $11.11 million

  22. Los Angeles Rams: $10.71 million

  23. Atlanta Falcons: $9.64 million

  24. Denver Broncos: $9.45 million

  25. San Francisco 49ers: $9.27 million

  26. Tennessee Titans: $7.76 million

  27. Seattle Seahawks: $6.80 million

  28. Buffalo Bills: $4.44 million

  29. New York Giants: $3.29 million

  30. Las Vegas Raiders: $2.83 million

  31. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: $1.51 million

  32. Kansas City Chiefs: $393,833

Related

Panthers claim S Josh Thomas off waivers

Panthers announce 2023 training camp schedule

Panthers, Brian Burns 'having conversations' about long-term extension

Story originally appeared on Panthers Wire